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Tuesday, 26 July 2016

Brutality of ISIS is the copy of what Mughals did with Sikhs and Hindus of India... in a present pic/scene what can be said...

The history of Sikhism is closely associated with the history of Punjab
and the socio-political situation in medieval India. Sikhs distinction
was further enhanced by the establishment of the Khalsa, by Guru Gobind
Singh in 1699. Sikhism was created by Guru Nanak,
a religious leader and a social reformer during the fifteenth century
in the Punjab region. The religious practice was formalized by Guru
Gobind Singh on 13 April 1699. The latter baptized five persons from
different social backgrounds to form Khalsa.

The genocide suffered
by the Hindus of India at the hands of Arab, Turkish, Mughal and Afghan
occupying forces for a period of 800 years is as yet formally
unrecognised by the World.
With the invasion of India by Mahmud Ghazni about 1000 A.D., began the
Muslim invasions into the Indian subcontinent and they lasted for
several centuries. Nadir Shah made a mountain of the skulls of the
Hindus he killed in Delhi alone. Babur raised towers of Hindu skulls at
Khanua when he defeated Rana Sanga in 1527 and later he repeated the
same horrors after capturing the fort of Chanderi. Akbar ordered a
general massacre of 30000 Rajputs after he captured Chithorgarh in 1568.
The Bahamani Sultans had an annual agenda of killing a minimum of
100000 Hindus every year.
The history of medieval India is full of such instances. The holocaust
of the Hindus in India continued for 800 years, till the brutal regimes
were effectively overpowered in a life and death struggle by the Sikhs
in the Panjab and the Hindu Maratha armies in other parts of India in
the late 1700’s.

Islamic India – The
biggest holocaust in World History
The genocide suffered by the Hindus of India at the hands of Arab,
Turkish, Mughal and Afghan occupying forces for a period of 800 years is
as yet formally unrecognised by the World.

Islamic India – The
biggest holocaust in World History
The genocide suffered by the Hindus of India at the hands of Arab,
Turkish, Mughal and Afghan occupying forces for a period of 800 years is
as yet formally unrecognised by the World.

The Mughal Empire was founded by Babur, a Central Asian
ruler who was descended from the Turko-Mongol conqueror Timur on his
father’s side and from Chagatai, the second son of the Mongol ruler
Genghis Khan, on his mother’s side. Ousted from his ancestral domains in
Central Asia, Babur turned to India to satisfy his ambitions. He
established himself in Kabul and then pushed steadily southward into
India from Afghanistan through the Khyber Pass. Babur’s forces occupied
much of northern India after his victory at Panipat in 1526. Generally
Sikhism has had amicable relations with other religions. However, during
the Mughal rule of India (1556–1707), the emerging religion had
strained relation with the ruling Mughals. Prominent Sikh Gurus were
martyred by Mughals for opposing some Mughal emperors’ persecution of Sikhs and Hindus. Subsequently, Sikhism militarized to oppose Mughal hegemony and ended their rule in India.

ISIS and Mughals

What ISIS is doing is the exact copy of what Mughals did against
Sikhs and Hindus from 15th century to 18th century. Mughal Empire wanted
whole India to be converted to Islam religion. Hindus started
converting to Muslim because of fear. Watching hundreds of thousands
conversion and the fear for their own life, Hindu religious leaders came
and asked for help from Sikh Gurus and his followers. Sikh Gurus
stepped up to protect freedom of religion (which was unheard on any
corner of the world at that time) and Mughals started the same brutal
war crime against Sikhs is exactly what Islamic State in Iraq and Syria
(ISIS) is doing today in 21st century.

Guru Arjan Dev Ji

The Mughal emperor Jahangir wrote in his autobiography Tuzk-e-Jahangiri
that too many people were becoming persuaded by Guru Arjan’s teachings
and if he did not become a Muslim the Sikh Panth had to be extinguished.
He ordered the Guru’s execution.
A contemporary Jesuit account, written in early 17th century by
Spanish Jesuit missionary into the Mughal court Father Jerome Xavier
(1542–1605), who was in Lahore at the time, records that the Sikhs
managed to get Jahangir to commute the death sentence to a heavy fine,
for which a rich individual, possibly a Sikh, stood as guarantor. The
Guru however refused to let a fine be paid for him and even refused when
a longtime friend of his, Sufi Sai Mian Mir, tried interceding on his
behalf. Jahangir tortured Guru Arjan in the hopes of extracting the
money, but the Guru refused to give the fine and was executed.

Guru Tegh Bahadur Sahib Ji

The Mughal Emperor Aurangzeb ordered Hindu temples to be destroyed
and that idol worship was to be stopped. He had a temple converted into a
Mosque and slaughtered a cow inside it. He also had Hindus sacked from
their government jobs and employed Muslims instead. Aurangzeb also
ordered Gurdwaras to be destroyed, and he expelled many missionaries
from the main cities.
Despite some resistance after many years of persecution, people were
being forced to take up Islam. Aurangzeb, being clever, decided if he
could convert the revered Brahmin Pandits of Kashmir that millions of
followers would then easily be converted. Threatened with conversion or
death, the Pandits overcome by panic, came in a delegation to Chakk
Nanaki, Pargana Kahlur and requested Guru Tegh Bahadur Ji’s help.
Hearing the serious nature of the conversation, Guru Ji’s 9 year old son
Gobind Rai Ji told his father what the problem was. The Guru told his
son of the Pandits dilemma and said that it would take a holy man
literally laying down his life to intercede. Gobind Rai responded “Who would be better than you to defend the poor Brahmins”.
Guru Tegh Bahadur Ji decided to stand up for the right of freedom of
worship and told the delegation to tell Aurangzeb that if he could
convert Guru Tegh Bahadur they would gladly convert.
Four days later Guru Tegh Bahadur ji was arrested, along with some of his followers, Bhai Dayala, Bhai Mati Das and Bhai Sati Das by Nur Muhammad Khan.
After Mati Das, Dyal Das and Sati Das were tortured and executed on
three consecutive days, Guru Tegh Bahadur was beheaded at Chandni Chowk
in 1675. Guru Tegh Bahadur is popularly known as “Hind Di Chadar”
i.e. “The Shield of India”, in reference to his popular image as
sacrificing his life for the protection of religious freedom in India.

Bhai Sati Das, Bhai Mati Das & Bhai Dayala

Mati Das while standing erect was tied between two posts. He was asked if he had any parting words, to which Mati Das answered, “I request only that my head be turned toward my Guru as I am executed.”
Two executioners placed a double-handed saw on his head. Mati Das
serenely uttered “Ek Onkar” and started reciting the Japji Sahib, the
great morning prayer of the Sikhs. He was sawn in half from head to
loins. It is said that even as the body was being sawn into two, the
Japji continued to reverberate from each part until it was all over.Bhai Sati Das was wrapped up in cotton wool, set alight and was roasted alive.
He remained calm and peaceful and kept uttering Waheguru, waheguru,
waheguru (Sikh meditation). His martyrdom is remembered by the Sikhs in
their daily prayers. This happened on 24 November 1675, on the same day
as Bhai Mati Das was executed.
Qazi pronounced his religious order that Bhai Dayala
must either accept Islam or be prepared to embrace death by being
boiled in a Cauldron. Bhai Dayal was asked for a final time if he would
leave his faith and embrace Islam. Bhai sahib defiantly and consistently
answered, “No!” to the qazi’s repeated requests. This infuriated the
qazi who pronunced his immediate torture and death. The executioners sat
Bhai Sahib in the cauldron of water under which a large fire was lit.
Slowly the water was let warm; then it was hot; soon it was too hot and
then it was boiling. Bhai Dayala continued to his last breath to recite
Sikh prayers.

Bhai Taru Singh Ji

After a short period of imprisonment and torture, Bhai Taru Singh ji
was brought by Mughals before Lahore Governor Zakariya Khan and given
the choice of converting to Islam or being executed. Taru Singh calmly
asked, “Why must I become a Mussalman (a Muslim person)? Do not the Mussalmans ever die?”
Upon his refusal, and in a public display, Bhai Taru Singh’s scalp was
cut away from his skull with a sharp knife to prevent his hair from ever
growing back. Bhai Taru Singh ji was left to bleed to his death by
Mughals.

Mass torture and persecution of Sikhs

Zakariya Khan was the Mughal governor of Lahore, now in Pakistan. He
had taken part in the Mughal Empire’s operations against the Sikh leader
Banda Singh Bahadur. After the capture of Banda
Singh and his companions in December 1715, he escorted the prisoners to
Delhi, rounding up Sikhs that he could find in villages along the
route. As he reached the Mughal capital, the caravan comprised seven
hundred bullock carts full of severed heads and over seven hundred
captives. He ordered village officials to capture Sikhs and hand them
over for execution. A graded scale of rewards was laid down – a blanket
for cutting off a Sikh’s hair; ten rupees for information about the
whereabouts of a Sikh; fifty rupees for a Sikh scalp. Plunder of Sikh
homes was made lawful; giving shelter to Sikhs or withholding
information about their movements was made a capital offense.

Zakariya Khan’s police, consisting of nearly 20,000 men especially
recruited for this purpose, scoured the countryside and brought back
hundreds of Sikhs in chains. Prominent Sikhs including the revered Bhai
Mani Singh and Bhai Tariff Singh were, after the severest of torments,
publicly beheaded at the Nakhas, the horse-market of Lahore, renamed by
Sikhs “Shahidganj” in honour of the martyrs. Yet Zakariya Khan remained
unsuccessful in his object of vanquishing the Sikhs. He died at Lahore
on 1 July 1745 a dispirited man, bequeathing to his sons and successors
chaos and confusion.

Torture on Sikh Women and children

From 1748-53, Sikh women and children were kidnapped from their villages
and imprisoned in the jails of Lahore by Mir Mannu. Every woman was
given forty pounds of grain to grind each day and heavy stones were
placed on the chest of those who were unable. The young children and
babies of these women, were tortured, speared and cut into pieces before
their very eyes. Their children were transfixed on javelins before
their very eyes. Their children were cut into pieces and garlands of
those pieces were put around their mother’s necks. They were given a
quarter of bread to eat and a bowl of water in the whole day. Bowing to
the will of God, those tolerated it all. On the 4th November, 1753 A.D.,
Mir Mannu died. After his death, Sikhs set the prisoners free and took
them away.

The genocide suffered by the Hindus of India at the hands of Arab, Turkish, Mughal and Afghans occupying forces for a period of 800 years is as yet formally unrecognized by the world.
In the present days, Terrorism is sponsored by some countries to boost
their sales; our own people fall a prey to their money, temptations,
affluence and ‘beauty of the skin’! Then with the help of locals, eager
to get favours, they start Terrorism within our country too; for the
sake of easy money, our media too probably mote terrorism in some way or
the other; practically none of our media and business houses present to
the public, the wrongs done to our forefathers...